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177 points JumpCrisscross | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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argentinian ◴[] No.45190101[source]
Do people in the U.S. have a good understanding of the causes of inflation?
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OgsyedIE ◴[] No.45190196[source]
Not even most economists do, by analogy to how opaque the questions of lifting bodies and rayleigh scattering are to physicists.
replies(2): >>45190266 #>>45191975 #
Eddy_Viscosity2 ◴[] No.45190266[source]
Yeah no, economists and a lot of people understand the the causes of inflation. There are economists who are paid very well to not understand it though, and such positions are often high in the government and financial sector hierarchies.
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chrisco255 ◴[] No.45191500[source]
Are these the same Fed economists that claimed the elevated inflation levels were transitory in 2021?

There are multiple schools of thought on causes of inflation, but generally I agree with late Milton Friedman that it is "everywhere and always a monetary phenomenon". Money supply expansion growing faster than GDP expansion causes inflation.

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triceratops ◴[] No.45192912[source]
If prices rise because of supply and demand, that's not inflation but something else?
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1. chrisco255 ◴[] No.45193119[source]
Yeah assuming money supply is flat or near flat, supply and demand will influence prices in one market or another in relation to the market as a whole, or you may have temporary periods of inflation followed by periods of deflation as we saw in the 1800s.

You can note this in the buying power of the USD during the 1800s: https://www.officialdata.org/us/inflation/1800?amount=1